ISIS Leader Just Released Another Audio Tape Amid Death Rumors

Screenshot/http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/pages/frontline/rise-of-isis/ The Islamic State (also known as ISIS or ISIL) says a newly released audio recording contains a message from Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi, the leader of the jihadist group.

The recording comes just days after Baghdadi was reportedly injured in a US airstrike. It appears to be genuine, according to the security firm Flashpoint Intelligence. The SITE Group also confirmed that the Islamic State released the message.

The audio is the highly secretive leader's second such message, and his first since a July 5 video showed him delivering a sermon at a mosque in Mosul.

The audio recording could be ISIS' attempt at proving that Baghdadi survived the US strike on Sunday. But the fact the message has been released only in audio form raises doubts as to how injured the airstrike may have left him, and it makes it difficult to immediately confirm whether Baghdadi is in fact the speaker on the tape.

An unconfirmed translation released at the same time as the recording and bearing the flag of the Islamic State includes a few references to events that can be dated. Baghdadi mentioned the Obama administration's Nov. 7 announcement that it was dispatching an additional 1,500 troops to Iraq. He also made what might be an oblique mention of jihadist groups in the Sinai that have "burnt their ships," a potential reference to a Thursday attack on an Egyptian naval vessel in the Mediterranean.

Crucially, there is no mention of Sunday's airstrike in the recording. The recording could in fact predate the airstrike and be purposed with distracting from Baghdadi's actual state of health.

Elsewhere in the recording, Baghdadi emphasizes his view that there is a religious obligation to join the fight in Iraq and Syria. At times he seems to openly bait the US into launching a ground war against him, and he argues that the US-led coalition campaign against ISIS is in a state of disarray.

"We see America and its allies stumbling between fear, weakness, inability, and failure. America, Europe, Australia, Canada, and their apostate tails and slaves from amongst the rulers of the Muslims' lands were terrified by the Islamic State," Baghdadi says according to the early translation.

He also lashes out against "the effeminate pilots from the soldiers of the Gulf rulers" and closes on an illustrative plea to his followers to "erupt volcanoes of jihad everywhere."